People v. O'Regan

221 A.D. 331, 223 N.Y.S. 339, 1927 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6438
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 221 A.D. 331 (People v. O'Regan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. O'Regan, 221 A.D. 331, 223 N.Y.S. 339, 1927 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6438 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

Kapper, J.

The defendant has been sentenced to imprisonment for the indeterminate sentence of from twenty to forty years upon a verdict finding him guilty of the crime of robbery in the first degree. He was indicted jointly with Anthony Ricchetti and John P. Brennan; and upon a former trial of the three defendants, Ricchetti and Brennan were convicted, but the jury disagreed as to the present defendant. In so far as the present record is concerned, there is no dispute regarding the facts of the robbery.

John E. Donovan, engaged in business as a contractor at Port Richmond, S. L, on the morning of September 11, 1926, drew from a bank approximately $4,500 in cash for payroll purposes, and brought the same to his office where he left it in charge of others shortly after ten o’clock in the forenoon. The defendant, with whose father and some other members of his family Mr. Donovan was acquainted, lived about four blocks from Donovan’s office.

Dorothy Simmons was Mr. Donovan’s stenographer and in the office on the morning in question. About ten-thirty o’clock Brennan, one of the codefendants, came into the office accompanied by another man. Brennan aimed a revolver at the witness “ and told me to put ’em up.” The robbery was then accomplished by the stealing of the cash which Mr. Donovan had drawn from the bank. There is no question of the occurrence of the robbery. As the men left with their loot, Miss Simmons saw them enter a motor car which at the same moment she saw driving up to the curb,” and she thereupon looked at and noted the license number of the car and the letter “ H ” on its front. There is no dispute but that this “H” represented the make of car known as Hupmobile.”

It was the theory of the prosecution that the defendant now before us drove the car. Further, that the two men who went into Donovan’s office and did the robbing were the two codefendants, Brennan and Ricchetti. As connecting the defendant with the commission of the crime it was proved through a police officer, that the defendant told him that he was the one who drove the car; that he had put court plaster on Ms face so as to prevent identification; that he did not go into Mr. Donovan’s office, but remained in the automobile. These admissions of the defendant to [333]*333the police officer found some corroboration in the fact that the defendant came to the police officer’s house when he told him this, and that the police officer’s wife saw her husband and the defendant in conversation at the time stated and another witness saw them together at that time in the neighborhood of where he and the police officer lived. There was also testimony which showed that defendant had been seen at prior times driving the automobile in question. Likewise, there was testimony tending to establish acquaintanceship, for a period of some months prior to the robbery, between the defendant and his codefendants.

The defendant was a witness in his own behalf. It is admitted that he had not been previously convicted; hence, the indeterminate sentence. He emphatically denied driving the car in question either with or without the codefendants, and denied any connection with the crime. There was also proof, in the nature of an alibi, that the defendant could not have been engaged in this offense.

The question as to the defendant’s guilt or innocence was clearly one of fact for the jury; and their verdict finding him guilty should ordinarily be upheld were it not for errors of a substantial and prejudicial character committed on the trial.

1. After the prosecution had established the robbery and an identification of Brennan, the People called Brennan and Ricchetti as witnesses. The district attorney urges that he had a right to call these two men as witnesses, and that right he certainly was entitled to. He attempted to prove by Brennan his residence address in Philadelphia, with the proper object of showing that at or about and at some time preceding the robbery, the defendant had called up on the telephone from his home on Staten Island the telephone number at the address at which Brennan lived in Philadelphia. By Ricchetti no such proof was attempted, but it would have been proper had it been sought to do so. The effort of the district attorney to prove association and acquaintanceship between the defendant and Brennan and Ricchetti was competent. But the district attorney went much further and interrogated Brennan regarding his conviction of this very crime and that he was at the time of trial a prisoner under that conviction. Moreover he proved through the witness that his attorney on the trial on which he was convicted was the attorney then appearing on the retrial of this defendant. By Ricchetti he established that he, too, was convicted for this robbery. It was improper for the district attorney to establish, or to seek to establish, that the two codefendants had been convicted of this robbery. They were not under cross-examination but were called by the district attorney himself, and while it was quite competent to prove by them or either of them a [334]*334residence to which the defendant telephoned in order to show possible intimacy between the defendant and these two men, to inform this jury in this way that these men who were jointly indicted with the defendant had been convicted, seems to me to have been incompetent and irrelevant testimony. That there was no mistake as to the purpose of the district attorney seems clear by his summing up, viz.: There has been another critical, pertinent remark made concerning the presence of Ricchetti and Brennan, why did I bring them here, why did I have this spectacular demonstration, why did I bring a situation about where Ricchetti openly exclaimed that I had framed him? Why, gentlemen of the jury, because in that spirit and in that connection and in pursuance of the duty that Mr. Innes says exists on the part of a district attorney, namely, to be a quasi judicial officer, that is to act as a judge or as a judge would, determine the truth, to act fairly, to act squarely. I did not think it would be right to allow you gentlemen to feel that this man alone is the only one on trial. I wanted you to see the two men who have been convicted by a jury of this county under this same indictment at the same time that you saw the man who through the ingenuity of his counsel managed to get a mistrial. Mr. Innes: I submit that is improper and the jury should disregard that. The Court: Yes, the jury will disregard it. Mr. Each: I did not mean to say anything improper, if it is improper I want the jury to disregard it. The Court: The only words objectionable were ‘ through the ingenuity of the counsel he succeeded in getting a mistrial,’ those words are objectionable.”

Thus we have it emphasized by the learned trial court that the one objectionable thing about it all was the district attorney’s reference to counsel’s “ ingenuity ” by means of which this defendant succeeded on the trial at which Brennan and Ricchetti were convicted in obtaining a disagreement of the jury in his own behalf. The learned district attorney points out no authority which justifies him in establishing these convictions for the purpose which he clearly indicated he intended it for, namely, that he wanted the jury to know that he was not trying the defendant alone for this robbery, but had performed his duty in obtaining the conviction of the two codefendants.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
221 A.D. 331, 223 N.Y.S. 339, 1927 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-oregan-nyappdiv-1927.